Solitar

Mike Lorrey, according to the USGS (see below links), your following is incorrect.You are the one extrapolating to the entire western half of Wyoming.

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The thing is that the Yellowstone Caldera includes almost the entire area of the state of Wyoming. If you look at a topographical map that shows the continental divide lines, you'll see that the divide splits in southern Wyoming and comes back together up north. This entire basin is the collapsed caldera of Yellowstone. If, and when, Yellowstone blows again, it will be the entire state of Wyoming that will go up in smoke.

If this thing blows the whole states (USA) and plus would be death. It blows regularly every 600 + million years and now is due. It might be within next 1 milion though, so what the beef? I watched this on discovery some weeks ago and posted some where around, but this was supposed to be just as ajoke. Suprvoulcano eruption will likely end civilisation as it is today

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Johnadams, according to the USGS (see below links), your following is incorrect.You are the one extrapolating to the entire western half of Wyoming.

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The thing is that the Yellowstone Caldera includes almost the entire area of the state of Wyoming. If you look at a topographical map that shows the continental divide lines, you'll see that the divide splits in southern Wyoming and comes back together up north. This entire basin is the collapsed caldera of Yellowstone. If, and when, Yellowstone blows again, it will be the entire state of Wyoming that will go up in smoke.

Note that the caldera is about 1,000 sq. miles out of Wyoming's 97,000 square miles -- about one percent. Yep, only 1% of Wyoming.

Actually, what I was describing was an older caldera. Looking at a mapquest map of the continental divide, down where I-80 passes by Table Rock, you see the feature I'm speaking of. My bad.

This being said, the Yellowstone still would wipe out the entire state if it lit off. Geological record shows that it covers all of WY along with parts of UT, CO, and other western states with lava and ash to significant depths when it blows.

Luckily, given that Yellowstone is a park, I doubt there are many permanent dwellings there

Try reading the part of the article stating that when Yellowstone blows it will lay waste to everything within 500 miles.

Ever heard of Spokane, Salt Lake City, Boise? How about Billings or Helena? Does Denver, a whole 85 miles past the radius of devastation, look like a pretty good place to be when unstable Yellowstone erupts?The scientists admit they don't know if it will go up in a million years, or tomorrow. There are plenty of geologically unstable places with which to concern ourselves, without gravitating to one of the worst (I'd sooner recommend San Francisco, L.A., and the rest of the Pacific-North American plate collision zone).

If this thing blows the whole states (USA) and plus would be death. It blows regularly every 600 + million years and now is due. ....

I think it last blew about 600 thousand, rather than million, years ago and the quotes of scientists I read said that they currently do not have sufficient data to make an educated guess about when it will blow next, but they are working on that and do not think it will be anytime soon. A major earthquake could happen anytime, however.

I am skeptical of the claim that a major Yellowstone eruption would destroy the entire country, but it has been said by scientists that a major Yellowstone volcano eruption would be far more devastating than the Mt. St. Helens disaster. My guess is that the areas worst hit will partly depend on which direction(s) the wind blows and the lava flows.

Luckily, given that Yellowstone is a park, I doubt there are many permanent dwellings there

Try reading the part of the article stating that when Yellowstone blows it will lay waste to everything within 500 miles. ....

The link you provide to the National Geographic article is undependable; I found the Google cache link to be more consistently available. I reviewed the article again and couldn't find mention of the 500 mile figure you noted. Are you speaking of a different article?

Still, a major Yellowstone eruption would be devastating (and would also threaten Montana, and perhaps other states, and would likely impact world weather patterns), as the following quote from the article indicates:

"this seemingly serene plateau could blow so hard it would make the 1980 Mount St. Helens explosion look like a sneeze."

Actually, the last estimated tracks that I've seen have Isabel making landfall in the Cape Hattaras or Virginia Beach areas, and then tracking up into the Chesapeake Bay.

Being someone who lives outside of Baltimore (-west- side, thankfully), it really doesn't matter if it 's 50 miles farther east, we're -still- going to get the crap beat out of us.

While I detest some of the things that George and Ashcroft have been pulling, praying that DC gets levelled (which is essentially what you're doing) ain't kosher, man. It gets levelled, and 2 of my brothers and my parents likely get whacked, too.

freedomroad

Actually, the last estimated tracks that I've seen have Isabel making landfall in the Cape Hattaras or Virginia Beach areas, and then tracking up into the Chesapeake Bay.

Being someone who lives outside of Baltimore (-west- side, thankfully), it really doesn't matter if it 's 50 miles farther east, we're -still- going to get the crap beat out of us.

I hope the FSP members (and others) in DE, DC, VA, and the rest of the area stay safe.

However, this does bring up a point. People can pretend that ID/MT/WY/SD/ND will all be wasted by a quake, but there is actual danger in DE. Well, there is also serious danger of freezing to death in all of the states (although it is very little in DE compared to the rest). My mom was telling me about how her mailman froze to death when she lived in ME.

Actually, the last estimated tracks that I've seen have Isabel making landfall in the Cape Hattaras or Virginia Beach areas, and then tracking up into the Chesapeake Bay.

Being someone who lives outside of Baltimore (-west- side, thankfully), it really doesn't matter if it 's 50 miles farther east, we're -still- going to get the crap beat out of us.

I hope the FSP members (and others) in DE, DC, VA, and the rest of the area stay safe.

However, this does bring up a point. People can pretend that ID/MT/WY/SD/ND will all be wasted by a quake, but there is actual danger in DE. Well, there is also serious danger of freezing to death in all of the states (although it is very little in DE compared to the rest). My mom was telling me about how her mailman froze to death when she lived in ME.

10,000+ people died from heat in France, at 104 degrees. It goes over 100 in Florida where I grew up, and can go way over in southwestern states. Yet people don't drop like flies. It's all in being prepared for what may happen. If it hits 100 and you don't have A/C, drink water, not red wine.

Thanks, Keith.I'm not looking forward to dealing with a storm that could rival what an unnamed storm did to MD in 1933...think Andrew, only a thousand miles to the north.Hugo ain't got -nothin- on Isabel.

I, on the other hand, do not, as much as I dislike how my parents have handled their interpersonal relationships.

The advocation of the deaths of innocents to 'eliminate' those who are enemies of freedom smacks of the same sort of attitude that permeates the halls of Congress today. The ends do _NOT_ justify the means if those means require that non-participants be sacrificed simply because they are inconveniently located.

Yea, earthquakes are pretty good at changing things and so are tornadoes, hurricanes, volcanoes and other things. Hopefully, in whichever state we have selected the FSP activists will long be remembered as a powerful force for political change too!

. . .the foundations of our national policy should be laid in private morality. If individuals be not influenced by moral principles, it is in vain to look for public virtue --The U.S. Senate's reply to George Washington's first inaugural address